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SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 17–1625
_________________
RIMINI STREET, INC., et al., PETITIONERS
v. ORACLE USA, INC., et al.
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the ninth circuit
[March 4, 2019]
Justice Kavanaugh delivered the opinion of the
Court.
The Copyright Act gives federal district courts
discretion to award “full costs” to a party in copyright
litigation. 17 U. S. C. §505. In the general statute
governing awards of costs, Congress has specified six categories of
litigation expenses that qualify as “costs.” See 28
U. S. C. §§1821, 1920. The question presented in this
case is whether the Copyright Act’s reference to “full costs”
authorizes a court to award litigation expenses beyond the six
categories of “costs” specified by Congress in the general costs
statute. The statutory text and our precedents establish that the
answer is no. The term “full” is a term of quantity or amount; it
does not expand the categories or kinds of expenses that may be
awarded as “costs” under the general costs statute. In copyright
cases, §505’s authorization for the award of “full costs” therefore
covers only the six categories specified in the general costs
statute, codified at §§1821 and 1920. We reverse in relevant part
the judgment of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit, and we remand the case for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.
I
Oracle develops and licenses software programs
that manage data and operations for businesses and non-profit
organizations. Oracle also offers its customers software
maintenance services.
Rimini Street sells third-party software
maintenance services to Oracle customers. In doing so, Rimini
competes with Oracle’s software maintenance services.
Oracle sued Rimini and its CEO in Federal
District Court in Nevada, asserting claims under the Copyright Act
and various other federal and state laws. Oracle alleged that
Rimini, in the course of providing software support services to
Oracle customers, copied Oracle’s software without licensing
it.
A jury found that Rimini had infringed various
Oracle copyrights and that both Rimini and its CEO had violated
California and Nevada computer access statutes. The jury awarded
Oracle $35.6 million in damages for copyright infringement and
$14.4 million in damages for violations of the state computer
access statutes. After judgment, the District Court ordered the
defendants to pay Oracle an additional $28.5 million in attorney’s
fees and $4.95 million in costs; the Court of Appeals reduced the
latter award to $3.4 million. The District Court also ordered the
defendants to pay Oracle $12.8 million for litigation expenses such
as expert witnesses, e-discovery, and jury consulting.
That $12.8 million award is the subject of the
dispute in this case. As relevant here, the U. S. Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed the District Court’s $12.8
million award. The Court of Appeals recognized that the general
federal statute authorizing district courts to award costs, 28
U. S. C. §§1821 and 1920, lists only six categories of
costs that may be awarded against the losing party. And the Court
of Appeals acknowledged that the $12.8 million award covered
expenses not included within those six categories. But the Court of
Appeals, relying on Circuit precedent, held that the District
Court’s $12.8 million award for additional expenses was still
appropriate because §505 permits the award of “full costs,” a term
that the Ninth Circuit said was not confined to the six categories
identified in §§1821 and 1920. 879 F.3d 948, 965−966 (2018).
We granted certiorari to resolve disagreement in
the Courts of Appeals over whether the term “full costs” in §505
authorizes awards of expenses other than those costs identified in
§§1821 and 1920. 585 U. S. ___ (2018). Compare 879 F. 3d,
at 965–966;
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. v.
Entertainment Distributing,
429
F.3d 869 (CA9 2005), with
Artisan Contractors Assn. of
Am.,
Inc. v.
Frontier Ins. Co.,
275 F.3d 1038 (CA11 2001);
Pinkham v.
Camex,
Inc.,
84 F.3d 292 (CA8 1996).
II
A
Congress has enacted more than 200
subject-specific federal statutes that explicitly authorize the
award of costs to prevailing parties in litigation. The Copyright
Act is one of those statutes. That Act provides that a district
court in a copyright case “in its discretion may allow the recovery
of full costs by or against any party other than the United States
or an officer thereof.” 17 U. S. C. §505.
In the general “costs” statute, codified at
§§1821 and 1920 of Title 28, Congress has specified six categories
of litigation expenses that a federal court may award as
“costs,”[
1] and Congress has
detailed how to calculate the amount of certain costs. Sections
1821 and 1920 in essence define what the term “costs” encompasses
in the subject-specific federal statutes that provide for an award
of costs.
Sections 1821 and 1920 create a default rule and
establish a clear baseline against which Congress may legislate.
Consistent with that default rule, some federal statutes simply
refer to “costs.” In those cases, federal courts are limited to
awarding the costs specified in §§1821 and 1920. If, for particular
kinds of cases, Congress wants to authorize awards of expenses
beyond the six categories specified in the general costs statute,
Congress may do so. For example, some federal statutes go beyond
§§1821 and 1920 to expressly provide for the award of expert
witness fees or attorney’s fees. See
West Virginia Univ.
Hospitals,
Inc. v.
Casey,
499 U.S.
83, 89, n. 4 (1991). Indeed, the Copyright Act expressly
provides for awards of attorney’s fees as well as costs. 17
U. S. C. §505. And the same Congress that enacted
amendments to the Copyright Act in 1976 enacted several other
statutes that expressly authorized awards of expert witness fees.
See
Casey, 499 U. S., at 88. But absent such express
authority, courts may not award litigation expenses that are not
specified in §§1821 and 1920.
Our precedents have consistently adhered to that
approach. Three cases illustrate the point.
In
Crawford Fitting Co. v.
J. T.
Gibbons,
Inc., the question was whether courts could
award expert witness fees under Rule 54(d) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure. Rule 54(d) authorizes an award of “costs” but does
not expressly refer to expert witness fees.
482
U.S. 437, 441 (1987). In defining what expenses qualify as
“costs,” §§1821 and 1920 likewise do not include expert witness
fees. We therefore held that the prevailing party could not obtain
expert witness fees: When “a prevailing party seeks reimbursement
for fees paid to its own expert witnesses, a federal court is bound
by the limit of §1821(b), absent contract or explicit statutory
authority to the contrary.”
Id., at 439.
In
Casey, we interpreted 42
U. S. C. §1988, the federal statute authorizing an award
of “costs” in civil rights litigation. We described
Crawford
Fitting as holding that §§1821 and 1920 “define the full extent
of a federal court’s power to shift litigation costs absent express
statutory authority to go further.” 499 U. S., at 86. In
accord with
Crawford Fitting, we concluded that §1988 does
not authorize awards of expert witness fees because §1988 supplies
no “ ‘explicit statutory authority’ ” to award expert
witness fees. 499 U. S., at 87 (quoting
Crawford
Fitting, 482 U. S., at 439).
In
Arlington Central School Dist. Bd. of
Ed. v.
Murphy, we considered the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act, which authorized an award of costs. The
question was whether that Act’s reference to “costs” encompassed
expert witness fees. We again explained that “costs” is “ ‘a
term of art that generally does not include expert fees.’ ”
548 U.S.
291, 297 (2006); see also
Taniguchi v.
Kan Pa- cific
Saipan,
Ltd.,
566 U.S.
560, 573 (2012). We stated: “[N]o statute will be construed as
authorizing the taxation of witness fees as costs unless the
statute ‘refer[s] explic- itly to witness fees.’ ”
Murphy, 548 U. S., at 301 (quoting
Crawford
Fitting, 482 U. S., at 445).
Our cases, in sum, establish a clear rule: A
statute awarding “costs” will not be construed as authorizing an
award of litigation expenses beyond the six categories listed in
§§1821 and 1920, absent an explicit statutory instruction to that
effect. See
Murphy, 548 U. S., at 301 (requiring
“ ‘explici[t]’ ” authority);
Casey, 499
U. S., at 86 (requiring “ ‘explicit’ ” authority);
Crawford Fitting, 482 U. S., at 439 (requiring
“explicit statutory authority”).
Here, the Copyright Act does not explicitly
authorize the award of litigation expenses beyond the six
categories specified in §§1821 and 1920. And §§1821 and 1920 in
turn do not authorize an award for expenses such as expert witness
fees, e-discovery expenses, and jury consultant fees, which were
expenses encompassed by the District Court’s $12.8 million award to
Oracle here. Rimini argues that the $12.8 million award therefore
cannot stand.
B
To sustain its $12.8 million award, Oracle
advances three substantial arguments. But we ultimately do not find
those arguments persuasive.
First, although Oracle concedes that it
would lose this case if the Copyright Act referred only to “costs,”
Oracle stresses that the Copyright Act uses the word “full” before
“costs.” Oracle argues that the word “full” authorizes courts to
award expenses beyond the costs specified in §§1821 and 1920. We
disagree. “Full” is a term of quantity or amount. It is an
adjective that means the complete measure of the noun it modifies.
See American Heritage Dictionary 709 (5th ed. 2011); Oxford English
Dictionary 247 (2d ed. 1989). As we said earlier this Term:
“Adjectives modify nouns—they pick out a subset of a category that
possesses a certain quality.”
Weyerhaeuser Co. v.
United
States Fish and Wildlife Serv., 586 U. S. ___, ___ (2018)
(slip op., at 8).
The adjective “full” in §505 therefore does not
alter the meaning of the word “costs.” Rather, “full costs” are all
the “costs” otherwise available under law. The word “full” operates
in the phrase “full costs” just as it operates in other common
phrases: A “full moon” means the moon, not Mars. A “full breakfast”
means breakfast, not lunch. A “full season ticket plan” means
tickets, not hot dogs. So too, the term “full costs” means
costs, not other expenses.
The dispute here, therefore, turns on the
meaning of the word “costs.” And as we have explained, the term
“costs” refers to the costs generally available under the federal
costs statute—§§1821 and 1920. “Full costs” are all the costs
generally available under that statute.
Second, Oracle maintains that the term
“full costs” in the Copyright Act is a historical term of art that
encompasses more than the “costs” listed in the relevant costs
statute—here, §§1821 and 1920. We again disagree.
Some general background: From 1789 to 1853,
federal courts awarded costs and fees according to the relevant
state law of the forum State. See
Crawford Fitting, 482
U. S., at 439−440;
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v.
Wilderness Society,
421 U.S.
240, 247−250 (1975). In 1853, Congress departed from that
state-focused approach. That year, Congress passed and President
Fillmore signed a comprehensive federal statute establishing a
federal schedule for the award of costs in federal court.
Crawford Fitting, 482 U. S., at 440; 10Stat. 161. Known
as the Fee Act of 1853, that 1853 statute has “carried forward to
today” in §§1821 and 1920 “ ‘without any apparent intent to
change the controlling rules.’ ”
Crawford Fitting, 482
U. S., at 440. As we have said, §§1821 and 1920 provide a
comprehensive schedule of costs for proceedings in federal
court.
Now some copyright law background: The term
“full [c]osts” appeared in the first copyright statute in England,
the Statute of Anne. 8 Anne c.19, §8 (1710). In the United States,
the Federal Copyright Act of 1831 borrowed the phrasing of English
copyright law and used the same term, “full costs.” Act of Feb. 3,
1831, §12, 4Stat. 438–439. That term has appeared in subsequent
revisions of the Copyright Act, through the Act’s most recent
substantive alterations in 1976. See Act of July 8, 1870, §108,
16Stat. 215; Copyright Act of 1909, §40, 35Stat. 1084; Copyright
Act of 1976, §505, 90Stat. 2586.
Oracle argues that English copyright statutes
awarding “full costs” allowed the transfer of all expenses of
litigation, beyond what was specified in any costs schedule.
According to Oracle, Congress necessarily imported that meaning of
the term “full costs” into the Copyright Act in 1831. And according
to Oracle, that 1831 meaning overrides anything that Congress
enacted in any costs statute in 1853 or later.
To begin with, our decision in
Crawford
Fitting explained that courts should not undertake extensive
historical excavation to determine the meaning of costs statutes.
We said that §§1821 and 1920 apply regardless of when individual
subject-specific costs statutes were enacted. 482 U. S., at
445. The
Crawford Fitting principle eliminates the need for
that kind of historical analysis and confirms that the Copyright
Act’s reference to “full costs” must be interpreted by reference to
§§1821 and 1920.
In any event, Oracle’s historical argument fails
even on its own terms. Oracle has not persuasively demonstrated
that as of 1831, the phrase “full costs” had an established meaning
in English or American law that covered more than the full amount
of the costs listed in the applicable costs schedule. On the
contrary, the federal courts as of 1831 awarded costs in accord
with the costs schedule of the relevant state law. See
id.,
at 439−440;
Alyeska Pipeline, 421 U. S., at 250. And
state laws at the time tended to use the term “full costs” to refer
to, among other things, full cost awards as distinguished from the
half, double, or treble cost awards that were also commonly
available under state law at the time.[
2] That usage accorded with the ordinary meaning of the
term. At the time, the word “full” conveyed the same meaning that
it does today: “Complete; entire; not defective or partial.” 1 N.
Webster, An American Dictionary of the English Language 89 (1828);
see also 1 S. Johnson, A Dictionary of the English Language 817
(1773) (“Complete, such as that nothing further is desired or
wanted; Complete without abatement; at the utmost degree”). Full
costs did not encompass expenses beyond those costs that otherwise
could be awarded under the applicable state law.
The case law since 1831 also refutes Oracle’s
historical argument. If Oracle’s account of the history were
correct, federal courts starting in 1831 presumably would have
interpreted the term “full costs” in the Copyright Act to allow
awards of litigation expenses that were not ordinarily available as
costs under the applicable costs schedule. But Rimini points out
that none of the more than 800 available copyright decisions
awarding costs from 1831 to 1976—that is, from the year the term
“full costs” first appeared in the Copyright Act until the year
that the Act was last significantly amended—awarded expenses other
than those specified by the applicable state or federal law. Tr. of
Oral Arg. 7. Oracle has not refuted Rimini’s argument on that
point. Oracle cites no §505 cases where federal courts awarded
expert witness fees or other litigation expenses of the kind at
issue here until the Ninth Circuit’s 2005 decision adopting the
interpretation of §505 that the Ninth Circuit followed in this
case. See
Twentieth Century Fox,
429
F.3d 869.
In light of the commonly understood meaning of
the term “full costs” as of 1831 and the case law since 1831,
Oracle’s historical argument falls short. The best interpretation
is that the term “full costs” meant in 1831 what it means now: the
full amount of the costs specified by the applicable costs
schedule.
Third, Oracle advances a variety of
surplusage arguments. Oracle contends, for example, that the word
“full” would be unnecessary surplusage if Rimini’s argument were
correct. We disagree. The award of costs in copyright cases was
mandatory from 1831 to 1976. See §40, 35Stat. 1084; §12,
4Stat. 438–439. During that period, the term “full” fixed both a
floor and a ceiling for the amount of “costs” that could be
awarded. In other words, the term “full costs” required an award of
100 percent of the costs available under the applicable costs
schedule.
Oracle says that even if that interpretation of
“full costs” made sense before 1976, the meaning of the term “full
costs” changed in 1976. That year, Congress amended the Copyright
Act to make the award of costs discretionary rather than mandatory.
See §505, 90Stat. 2586. According to Oracle, after Congress made
the costs award discretionary, district courts could award any
amount of costs up to 100 percent and so Rimini’s reading of the
word “full” now adds nothing to “costs.” If we assume that Congress
in 1976 did not intend “full” to be surplusage, Oracle argues that
Congress must have employed the term “full” to mean expenses beyond
the costs specified in §§1821 and 1920.
For several reasons, that argument does not
persuade us.
To begin with, even if the term “full” lacked
any continuing significance after 1976, the meaning of “costs” did
not change. The term “costs” still means those costs specified in
§§1821 and 1920. It makes little sense to think that Congress in
1976, when it made the award of full costs discretionary rather
than mandatory, silently expanded the kinds of expenses that a
court may otherwise award as costs in copyright suits.[
3]
Moreover, Oracle’s interpretation would create
its own redundancy problem by rendering the second sentence of §505
largely redundant. That second sentence provides: “Except as
otherwise provided by this title, the court may also award a
reasonable attorney’s fee to the prevailing party as part of the
costs.” 17 U. S. C. §505. If Oracle were right that “full
costs” covers all of a party’s litigation expenditures, then the
first sentence of §505 would presumably already cover attorney’s
fees and the second sentence would be largely unnecessary. In order
to avoid some redundancy, Oracle’s interpretation would create
other redundancy.
Finally, even if Oracle is correct that the term
“full” has become unnecessary or redundant as a result of the 1976
amendment, Oracle overstates the significance of statutory
surplusage or redundancy. Redundancy is not a silver bullet. We
have recognized that some “redundancy is ‘hardly unusual’ in
statutes addressing costs.”
Marx v.
General Revenue
Corp.,
568 U.S.
371, 385 (2013). If one possible interpretation of a statute
would cause some redundancy and another interpretation would avoid
redundancy, that difference in the two interpretations can supply a
clue as to the better interpretation of a statute. But only a clue.
Sometimes the better overall reading of the statute contains some
redundancy.
* * *
The Copyright Act authorizes federal district
courts to award “full costs” to a party in copyright litigation.
That term means the costs specified in the general costs statute,
§§1821 and 1920. We reverse in relevant part the judgment of the
Court of Appeals, and we remand the case for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.